Iraqi Doctors in Hiding Treat as They Can

Seventy percent of Iraq's doctors are reported
to have fled the war-torn country in the face of death threats and kidnappings.
Those who remain live in fear, often in conditions close to house arrest.

"I was threatened I would be killed because I was working for the Iraqi
government at the Medical City," Dr. Thana Hekmaytar told IPS. Baghdad
Medical City is the largest medical complex in the country.

Dr. Hekmaytar, a head and neck surgeon, has now been practicing at the Saint
Raphael Hospital in Baghdad for the last five years.

It is difficult now both as woman and as doctor, she says. Most women are now
living in repressive conditions because the government is less secular. And
that is besides the chaotic conditions around Iraq.

"It is particularly difficult for female doctors," Dr. Hekmaytar
says. "Large groups in Iraq only want us to stay at home, and certainly
not be professionals."

"We've had doctors kidnapped, and so many others have fled," said
Khaleb, a senior manager at the hospital who requested that his last name not
be used. He named several doctors who had been kidnapped. This IPS correspondent,
he said, was the first media person allowed into the hospital since the U.S.
invasion of March 2003.

Doctors and other professionals become targets for kidnapping since they earn
more money than most, and so fetch higher ransom.

"I've had to ask for security to protect the hospital," Khaleb said.
"After this, I went to Amman and convinced many of our doctors there to
return. They did, but now they live in the hospital and never go outside. This
has been the case since 2005. Every two months they leave to go visit their
families in Jordan."

Saint Raphael is a 35-bed hospital, but sees more than a thousand patients
daily, says Khaleb. "Of our specialist doctors, ten live here full time.
In addition, we have three younger doctors living here full time."

Large concrete blocks restrict entry to the street leading up to the hospital.
Iraqi army personnel guard the front door. Everyone entering the hospital is
searched.

The hospital is located in the Karrada area of Baghdad, just across the Tigris
river from the Green Zone. The neighborhood is relatively safe by Baghdad standards,
although attacks and car bombings still take place.

The hospital is on a side street close to several apartment buildings and private
homes. Unlike most government hospitals it is clean and well stocked.

Dr. Hekmaytar is one of the doctors Khaleb persuaded to return to Baghdad.
"Of course nobody likes to leave her home country, I was so sad,"
she said. "I am grateful to be back, but wish it wasn't under these difficult
circumstances."

Sitting with several doctors outside an operating room, she told IPS that death
threats have never gone away.

"This is common here even now, but was especially so during 2004,"
she said, as other doctors nodded in agreement. "Now I live and work in
the hospital, and never leave."

Dr. Hekmaytar, a Christian, received death threats twice. One came by way of
a note in an envelope telling her to convert to Islam, or else. The second time
she received a note in an envelope instructing her to where hijab. The note
was enclosed with a bullet.

Dr. Shakir Mahmood Al-Robaie, an anesthetist, too lives on the premises of
the hospital where he works. "I both live and work here because I was threatened,"
he told IPS. "My family is in Jordan."

The doctor said his family received an envelope containing just a single bullet.
After this, he moved his family to Jordan, and then returned to Iraq to get
an income for himself and his family.

"Common? These threats are not just common," said Dr. Jafir Hasily,
a surgeon sitting across from Dr. Hekhaytar. "They are routine. This happens
all the time."

The Iraqi government estimates there were 36,000 doctors and medical personnel
in Iraq when the U.S. invasion was launched in March 2003. Most escaped to neighboring
Arab countries, especially Jordan and Syria.

In early 2008, the Iraqi Health Ministry said that 628 medical personnel have
been killed since 2003. Many believe the real figure is far higher, and that
there is additionally a very large number of doctors who have been kidnapped
and tortured.

In the absence of the doctors who left, particularly of senior doctors, the
medical system is on the brink of collapse. It is short not just of doctors
but also of other qualified staff, equipment and drugs. Patients are often forced
to buy their own medicines on the black market.

The security situation that led to the exodus of doctors is now somewhat better,
but remains unstable.

Originally from Anchorage, Alaska, Dahr Jamail writes about the
effects of the US occupation on the people of Iraq, since the mainstream
media in the US has in large part, he believes, failed to do so.

Dahr has spent a total of 5 months in occupied Iraq, and plans
on returning in October to continue reporting on the occupation.
One of only a few independent reporters in Iraq, Dahr will be using
the DahrJamailIraq.com
website and mailing list to disseminate his dispatches and will
continue as special correspondent for Flashpoints Radio.

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